Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Namib High School (1913–1918: Städtische Realschule mit Grundschule, 1919–1929: Swakopmund Primary School, 1930–1945: Reformrealgymnasium, 1946–1975: Swakopmund High School, 1976–1980: Deutsche Schule Swakopmund, 1981–1997: Deutsche Oberschule Swakopmund), Swakopmund, Erongo Region [46]
Secondary School Swakopmund is a school in Swakopmund in the Erongo Region of central Namibia.Established in 1967 It is one of the oldest schools in Erongo Region. [1]The school taught in German and Afrikaans before Namibian Independence but has since changed to English as the medium of instruction.
Aerial view of Namib High School (2017) Namib High School is a secondary government school in Swakopmund, Namibia.It has 640 learners and 28 teachers. [1] Founded as Städtische Realschule mit Grundschule (Municipal High School with Primary School) during the colonial time of German South-West Africa in 1913 it is one of the oldest schools in Namibia.
Marja Ilmatar Väisälä (9 May 1916, Helsinki, Finland [1] – 21 December 2011, Turku) was a Finnish teacher of mathematics and natural sciences, who in 1950 founded a private school in Swakopmund in what is now Namibia, where she taught the children of Finnish missionaries.
Finnish missionary children went to school in Swakopmund since 1945. As soon as the construction of the Vineta neighbourhood began, a school building for the Finnish Private School was built in Vineta. The school operated there from 1950 to 1989 excluding the school year 1986–87. The school had grades 1–9.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Karibib Private School; M. ... Secondary School Swakopmund This page was last edited on 24 January 2019, at ...
Stampriet is home to Privatskool Elnatan, founded in April 1992, which has 370 students in grades 1 through 12 and 61 staff. Due to the town's small size, 80% of students live in the school's four dormitories, coming from around the country since few private schools in Namibia offer Afrikaans-language education through grade 12.
In 1926 the school introduced the Abitur and thus assumed the name Deutsche Oberrealschule (German senior secondary school). When the Abitur was replaced by the matric in 1941, the school was renamed Höhere Privatschule (lit. Higher private school), and it got its current name in 1958. [4]